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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage speaking during a rally (Chris Radburn/PA)

Nigel Farage under pressure over financial support from convicted criminal

Farage reacted angrily when approached at an airport by a Sky News journalist asking whether it had been a mistake not to declare gifts from George Cottrell.

NIGEL FARAGE NEEDS to “level with the public” about financial support given to him by a convicted criminal, Labour said.

The Reform UK leader is facing intense scrutiny over the support given to him by long-term associate George Cottrell, which included funding for staffing, security and the use of a London townhouse, according to The Sunday Times.

Farage has claimed he is the victim of an “establishment hit job” and insisted he had committed “no wrongdoing”.

But chairwoman of the Labour Party Anna Turley urged Farage to stop “blaming the media” and answer questions about the support from Cottrell.

The Cabinet minister and Redcar MP said: “Reform’s excuses for the scandals engulfing Nigel Farage are getting pathetically weak. His top team must be wondering how many more times they will be wheeled out to defend the indefensible only for the rap sheet against him to grow just hours later.

“This latest revelation appears to pour cold water on Farage’s claims that the gifts and support he received from a convicted criminal were not in support of his political activities.

“Nigel Farage must come out of hiding and level with the public. It’s time he stopped blaming the media and took responsibility for his actions.”

The Sunday Times said Cottrell recruited and paid three staff members to work on Farage’s social media before the general election, and has continued to allow him to use a five-storey Georgian property he rented near Buckingham Palace.

Under rules in place at the time of Farage’s election in 2024, new MPs were required to register any gifts worth more than £300 (€350) they received in the previous 12 months, except where the gift “could not be reasonably thought by others” to relate to their political activities.

Labour and the Lib Dems have called for Parliament’s standards commissioner, who is already investigating a £5 million (€5.85 million) gift Farage received from crypto-billionaire Christopher Harborne, to examine the support from Cottrell.

Farage reacted angrily when approached at an airport by a Sky News journalist asking whether it had been a mistake not to declare gifts from Cottrell.

“You tell your bosses, you harass my family any more… serious consequences. That’s what your organisation has done this morning. Go away,” he said.

Sky said it had not contacted anyone from Farage’s family about the story.

The Reform leader on Sunday issued a statement insisting he had not broken any rules.

He said: “I have done no wrongdoing, followed the rules and I am now considering legal action against The Sunday Times.

“It’s now clear the establishment will stop at nothing to hurt Reform – we want to smash their cosy consensus.”

Reform UK’s Treasury spokesman Robert Jenrick said Cottrell is an “old friend” of Farage and has “no formal role within Reform”.

The Times reported Cottrell handed out a business card printed with his name, the Reform UK logo and Farage’s official email address, despite having no formal role in the party.

After becoming the MP for Clacton in 2024, Farage registered a £9,000 (€11,000) trip to Belgium donated by Cottrell, and belatedly added £15,000 (€18,000) for a US domestic flight, but no other support.

Asked if Cottrell paid for Farage’s security and staff in 2024, Jenrick told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme he did but this was “before he became a Member of Parliament”.

sunday-with-laura-kuenssberg Reform UK Treasury spokesperson Robert Jenrick on the BBC1 current affairs programme, Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg (Jeff Overs/BBC). PA PA

Cottrell was jailed for eight months in the US in 2017 after pleading guilty to a charge of wire fraud after admitting attempting to defraud criminals on the dark web by masquerading as a money launderer.

He was arrested as he and Farage travelled back to Britain following a trip to the US.

Cottrell reportedly remains a close adviser to Mr Farage after first becoming involved in Ukip as a volunteer in the run-up to the Brexit referendum.

Parliament’s standards commissioner Daniel Greenberg is already investigating whether Farage should have registered an undisclosed £5 million gift from Thai-based billionaire Harborne.

If found to have breached the rules, Mr Farage could face sanctions including a Commons’ suspension that could trigger a recall petition and a by-election in his seat.

Labour has called for a financial watchdog probe into whether Farage’s advocacy for cryptocurrency has benefitted Reform mega-donor Harborne, after reports he lobbied the Bank of England governor to scrap plans for a state-run, digital currency.

Labour peer Harriet Harman has accused Farage of trying to “delegitimise” the parliamentary standards process with his claim of an “establishment hit job”.

“He’s attacking and trying to delegitimise the system, and if it comes to a finding by the commissioner that he has been in breach of the rules, the way he’s conducted himself whilst he’s being under investigation will be taken into account as an aggravating fact when it comes to the penalty,” the former chair of the parliamentary standards committee told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

She added: “This is the opposite of an establishment hit job. This is so that the public can know that the establishment, in terms of people with lots of money, are not buying their members of parliament.”

alliance-for-responsible-citizenship-conference Kemi Badenoch warned that the scandal gives a flavour of what a Nigel Farage-led Reform UK government would look like (PA) PA PA

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the controversy was an “indicator” of what a Reform government led by Farage would look like, claiming there would be “endless scandals” and “chaos”.

Asked if the Conservatives were preparing to fight a potential byelection in his Clacton constituency, and whether Farage was finished, the Tory leader told a Politics UK event: “I would be surprised if this was the end of Nigel Farage.

“He’s been hanging around politics for a very long time. He’s had his ups and downs, and it’s very clear that he’s going through quite a difficult time.

“But I just see this as an indicator of what, if he ever got in, what a Nigel Farage government would look like. It would just be this over and over again, things not being reported, endless scandals, and I just think that it would be chaos.”

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